American Express targets
debt-leery consumers with new card features
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[August 30, 2017]
By David Henry
NEW YORK (Reuters) - American Express Co is
unveiling a new option that could tempt young, budget-conscious
consumers into taking on credit card debt.
On Wednesday, the No. 1 U.S. card issuer by spending will roll out a
feature that will allow customers to borrow for big purchases like
furniture, medical expenses, airplane tickets or weddings, while
separating those balances from everyday items like $2 cups of coffee.
American Express is also adding a feature that will allow customers to
immediately pay for small purchases from their bank accounts.
Under the new option as many as 10 purchases of at least $100 each can
be siloed into installment plans, American Express said. A $1,000
purchase, for example, could be covered in six monthly installments of
$172.18 – costing an additional $33.06, or $5.51 a month, in finance
fees. That is virtually the same as AmEx would charge in interest for a
revolving balance on the account.
Other monthly spending would be interest free as long the cardholder
pays in full by the due date.
Together, the options will allow cardholders to decide what purchases
deserve interest payments and better manage their budgets in real time,
said Jeff Chwast, head of global lending new products and capabilities
at American Express.
"You'll know exactly how much you'll be charged before you set up the
plan, which is very different than a normal credit-card revolve
feature," Chwast said in an interview last week.
In adding the features, American Express is responding to a generational
shift that has hurt credit-card lenders.
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Credit cards of American Express are photographed in this
illustration picture in this March 17, 2016, file photo. REUTERS/Kai
Pfaffenbach/Illustration/Files
Young Americans who grew up during the Great Recession and saw parents struggle
with debt, or who faced their own problems with cards before the implementation
of financial reforms in 2010, have eschewed racking up balances, industry
research has shown.
At the same time, big banks such as JPMorgan Chase & Co and Citigroup Inc have
been enhancing rewards for spending on their credit cards and have taken market
share from American Express.
AmEx still has more spending on its cards than any other U.S. issuer, with 22.1
percent of the total last year, according to The Nilson Report. However, its
market share fell from the prior year, partly because mega-retailer Costco
shifted its jointly branded cards to Citigroup from American Express.
American Express slipped in outstanding balances as well, ranking fourth last
year with 10.7 percent.
The test of whether its new features succeed may come down to whether debt-leery
customers are willing to pay AmEx a little more for big-ticket items.
American Express is hoping the changes will lead more customers to use its cards
and thereby increase company revenue, Chwast said.
"We believe customers will be taking out their American Express card to pay,
rather than other cards," Chwast said.
(Reporting by David Henry in New York; Editing by Lauren Tara LaCapra and Steve
Orlofsky)
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